Resisting retirement
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I was just chatting with a woman in the company canteen, as we prepare to vacate the building in a week's time.
She told me she graduated from high school in 1963, came to work here the following year and has been here ever since.
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@Jolly said in Resisting retirement:
What does she do?
She's an admin person. Currently, she works in the company technical library. At one point I think she was the PA to one of the senior executive, possibly the CEO.
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I was just chatting with a woman in the company canteen, as we prepare to vacate the building in a week's time.
She told me she graduated from high school in 1963, came to work here the following year and has been here ever since.
@Doctor-Phibes said in Resisting retirement:
She told me she graduated from high school in 1963, came to work here the following year and has been here ever since.
Wow. That's even older than me, LOL. And I retired (almost) 7 years ago.
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@Jolly said in Resisting retirement:
Is she competent?
I'm sure she does fine. It's just amazing that she graduated high school the year I was born, and has been here ever since.
I think they force you to start collecting your pension when you turn 70, so she's probably earning double to boot.
I must admit, I'm re-thinking my plans a little. My father in law is still working at 75, and looks an awful lot younger than my dad did at that age.
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Conversely, I met up with a good friend in the UK this summer. He worked his ass off in financial services and retired at about 54-55. Now he works part time for a charity. He is so much happier now.
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Financial jobs are soul-crushing, not least because of the sorts of people one is surrounded with in the workplace, almost all chasing the dream of money and early retirement and cynically trying to get ahead by any means possible.
In my current situation, I could happily keep this up indefinitely. I only worry about not being in the office information flows.
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My parents' game was put your head down, do the shit and wait to retire. Which they did, and I suppose they're enjoying themselves, but I never want to retire. I may stop working for companies—that would be awesome, actually—but I don't want to stop doing what I'm doing.
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@Jolly said in Resisting retirement:
Is she competent?
I'm sure she does fine. It's just amazing that she graduated high school the year I was born, and has been here ever since.
I think they force you to start collecting your pension when you turn 70, so she's probably earning double to boot.
I must admit, I'm re-thinking my plans a little. My father in law is still working at 75, and looks an awful lot younger than my dad did at that age.
@Doctor-Phibes said in Resisting retirement:
@Jolly said in Resisting retirement:
Is she competent?
I'm sure she does fine. It's just amazing that she graduated high school the year I was born, and has been here ever since.
I think they force you to start collecting your pension when you turn 70, so she's probably earning double to boot.
I must admit, I'm re-thinking my plans a little. My father in law is still working at 75, and looks an awful lot younger than my dad did at that age.
Shift gears. Do something different.
You'll be amazed how it can stretch your brain.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Resisting retirement:
She told me she graduated from high school in 1963, came to work here the following year and has been here ever since.
Wow. That's even older than me, LOL. And I retired (almost) 7 years ago.
@George-K said in Resisting retirement:
@Doctor-Phibes said in Resisting retirement:
She told me she graduated from high school in 1963, came to work here the following year and has been here ever since.
Wow. That's even older than me, LOL. And I retired (almost) 7 years ago.
Slacker.
My wife's old doc is 86. Still doing medical missionary work.
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We have some great examples of dreams come true right here in tncr.
The life-long dream of posting here while surfing the internet has become reality.
@Copper said in Resisting retirement:
We have some great examples of dreams come true right here in tncr.
The life-long dream of posting here while surfing the internet has become reality.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Resisting retirement:
@Jolly said in Resisting retirement:
Is she competent?
I'm sure she does fine. It's just amazing that she graduated high school the year I was born, and has been here ever since.
I think they force you to start collecting your pension when you turn 70, so she's probably earning double to boot.
I must admit, I'm re-thinking my plans a little. My father in law is still working at 75, and looks an awful lot younger than my dad did at that age.
Shift gears. Do something different.
You'll be amazed how it can stretch your brain.
@Jolly said in Resisting retirement:
Shift gears. Do something different.
You'll be amazed how it can stretch your brain.
I was thinking of getting a job as a handy man at a convent.
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Conversely, I met up with a good friend in the UK this summer. He worked his ass off in financial services and retired at about 54-55. Now he works part time for a charity. He is so much happier now.
@Doctor-Phibes said in Resisting retirement:
Conversely, I met up with a good friend in the UK this summer. He worked his ass off in financial services and retired at about 54-55. Now he works part time for a charity. He is so much happier now.
Meh, slacker. I did that too but retired at 44.
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@Jolly said in Resisting retirement:
Is she competent?
I'm sure she does fine. It's just amazing that she graduated high school the year I was born, and has been here ever since.
I think they force you to start collecting your pension when you turn 70, so she's probably earning double to boot.
I must admit, I'm re-thinking my plans a little. My father in law is still working at 75, and looks an awful lot younger than my dad did at that age.
@Doctor-Phibes said in Resisting retirement:
I must admit, I'm re-thinking my plans a little. My father in law is still working at 75, and looks an awful lot younger than my dad did at that age.
You have to retire to something, not just from something. Otherwise it often doesn't go well.
My dad just sat around and atrophied for 15 years then died.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Resisting retirement:
Conversely, I met up with a good friend in the UK this summer. He worked his ass off in financial services and retired at about 54-55. Now he works part time for a charity. He is so much happier now.
Meh, slacker. I did that too but retired at 44.
@jon-nyc said in Resisting retirement:
@Doctor-Phibes said in Resisting retirement:
Conversely, I met up with a good friend in the UK this summer. He worked his ass off in financial services and retired at about 54-55. Now he works part time for a charity. He is so much happier now.
Meh, slacker. I did that too but retired at 44.
I could have retired around there without selling my soul, or even working hard. But I got married instead.